posted on 2022-11-01, 04:10authored byDean James McMah
<p>The Greek <em>polis </em>(or ‘city-state’) is integral to our modern understanding of ancient Greek history because by the fifth century B.C. it was a major characteristic of and platform for the Greek human experience and communal belonging. How, then, may an individual <em>polis </em>community express its own unique identity as it exercises continuous dialogue with its surrounding environment, particularly other <em>poleis </em>(‘city-states’)? This research question investigates Plataea’s own Boeotian sense of communal identity in the face of fluctuating political climates and military conflicts during the middle-fifth century B.C. The Plataeans enter the historical record as a Boeotian community on the border of Boeotian territory who famously (or infamously) allied themselves with Athens as a means to protect themselves from Theban influence. After the repulsion of the Persian invasion in 479 B.C., Plataea is immortalised as the land “where the Greeks won their freedom”. By 427 B.C., half a century later, Plataea is tragically destroyed by Sparta – a rather grim casualty early in the Atheno-Peloponnesian War. </p>
<p>The aim of this research project is to establish a sense of Plataea’s communal expression within the fifth century B.C. prior to the destruction. With a Boeotian identity established through inscriptional evidence and poetic performances of the late-sixth and early fifth-centuries, Plataea’s own communal identity is explored in the same way through evidence such as the Delphic Tripod dedication, and their representation in Thucydides’ speeches at 3.53-59. </p>
<p>I revisit these pieces of evidence through a sociological lens of human world-building and maintenance, as well as community identity through symbolism. From this analysis, a new consideration may be achieved regarding the complexities and significance of Greek <em>polis </em>culture both as a product of, and a habitant within, the intricacies of <em>polis </em>politics. </p>
History
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: studying the communal expression of the Plataean polis in the fifth century B.C. -- Chapter 2: approaching fifth-century B.C. Plataea - Boeotian community, identity, and cultural expression -- Chapter 3: a history of Plataea from 519 B.C. to 427 B.C. -- Chapter 4: evidence analysis - Plataean communal expression -- Chapter 5: conclusion -- Bibliography
Awarding Institution
Macquarie University
Degree Type
Thesis MRes
Degree
Thesis (MRes), Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Department of History and Archaeology, 2022
Department, Centre or School
Department of History and Archaeology
Year of Award
2022
Principal Supervisor
Paul McKechnie
Rights
Copyright: The Author
Copyright disclaimer: https://www.mq.edu.au/copyright-disclaimer